Arabic Grammar and Linguistics Arabic Grammar and Linguistics Edited by Yasir Suleiman R Routledge Taylor &. Francis Group LONDON AND NEW YORK DEDICATION I dedicate this volume to the memory of Sandor Hervey (1942-1997) whose untimely death has deprived me of a true friend and a fine colleague First Published in 1999 by Routledge Reprinted 2003 by Routledge 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, 0X14 4RN Transferred to Digital Printing 2006 Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group Editorial Matter © 1999 Yasir Suleiman All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book has been requested ISBN 0-7007-1007-8 Publisher’s Note The publisher has gone to great lengths to ensure the quality of this reprint but points out that some imperfections in the original may be apparent CONTENTS Names of Contributors...............................................................vii Acknowledgments......................................................................viii Introduction....................................................................................1 PART I: ARABIC GRAMMAR 1 Zayd Ibn ‘All's Commentary on the Qur'an.....................9 Kees Versteegh 2 Autonomy versus Non-Autonomy in the Arabic Grammatical Tradition.......................................................30 Yasir Suleiman 3 Aspects of the Use of Grammatical Terminology in Medieval Arabic Grammatical Tradition...................50 Yishai Peled 4 Coalescence as a Grammatical Tool in Sibawayhi's Kitdb .....................................................................................86 Ramzi Baalbaki 5 The Syntactic Study of Mafiil Mutlaq: A Study in Qur'anic Syntax........................................................................ Rafi Talmon 6 Modalities and Grammaticalization in Arabic.............107 Nadia Anghelescu PART II: ARABIC LINGUISTICS and BEYOND 7 Vocatives as Exclamatory Nouns in Iraqi Arabic.......144 Farida Abu-Haidar 8 The Syntax of Arabic Headlines and News Summaries..........................................................................161 Janet Watson 9 Semantic Considerations in the Syntactic Structures of Complement Clauses in Modem Literary Arabic..................................................................182 Maria Persson 10 Cross-Addressing: Reverse Gender Reference in Spoken Cairene Arabic....................................................203 David Wilmsen 11 On Translating Palestinian Folk Tales: Comparative Stylistics and the Semiotics of Genre....222 Ibrahim Muhawi vi NAMES OF CONTRIBUTORS Farida Abu-Haidar University of London Nadia Anghelescu University of Bucharest Ramzi Baalbaki American University of Beirut Ibrahim Muhawi University of Edinburgh Yishai Peled University of Tel Aviv Maria Persson University of Lund Yasir Suleiman University of Edinburgh Rafi Talmon University of Haifa Kees Versteegh University of Nijmegen Janet Watson University of Durham David Wilmsen American University in Cairo ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to express my thanks and gratitude to Shahla, Tamir and Sinan for all the love and support they gave me during the editing of this book. I am grateful to Claire Thomson for her help in producing the final version of this volume. I am particularly grateful to all the contributors for their co-operation. Finally I am grateful to the Arts, Divinity and Music Research Fund, University of Edinburgh for their financial support in producing this volume. Yasir Suleiman Edinburgh, 15 June 1998 INTRODUCTION Yasir Suleiman In a paper published a decade ago, Carter (1988:217) makes an impassioned plea to end the "artificial dichotomy" which exists between what he calls "Arab linguistics", which we called by its more usual name 'Arabic grammar' in the title of this volume, and "Arabic linguistics" whose aim is to apply modem linguistic theory to the study of the Arabic language in its standard and dialectal manifestations. However, Carter is quick to remind us that the rapprochement between these two approaches to the study of the language must respect their theoretical integrity. Not only is this a necessary condition for the fruitful cross fertilisation between these two modes of study, but it is also important to avoid the temptation of trying to construct Arabic grammatical theory in the image of modern linguistic approaches, often in a violent or Procrustean fashion. As one who started his career as a theoretical linguist, but later developed an interest in the Arabic Grammatical Tradition because of what it tells us about the "religion, thought, ideology [and] aesthetics" of the Arabs (ibid.:206), I cannot but agree with Carter's call to end the polarisation between Arab and Arabic linguistics. In this context, complementarity, rather than opposition or imposition, would be the order of the day. This vision represents a major guiding principle in the present compilation. Some of the papers in this volume owe their genesis to a conference entitled Arabic Grammar and Linguistics, which was held in Edinburgh in August 1996 under the auspices of the Edinburgh Institute for the Advanced Study of Islam and the Middle East in its former incarnation as the Muir Institute. Others were selected from a number of papers which were solicited specifically for this volume. All the papers, however, subscribe to the guiding principle articulated above. This is reflected symbolically in the title of this book, in which the term "Arabic" is used to qualify both "Grammar" and "Linguistics" at one and the same time. In what follows we will give a broad outline of the papers in this volume to help contextualise them in relation to each other. i 2 YASIR SULEIMAN Interest in the formative impulses of the Arabic Grammatical Tradition has been a predominant theme in Western scholarship on the subject. Broadly speaking, views on the topic have varied between those that sought to account for the rise of Arabic grammar by reference to external factors, whether mediated or not, whose roots lie in a foreign intellectual tradition, and those which seek to locate the origins of Arabic grammar in its native cultural environment. A middle position between these two extremes exists, whereby the interaction between the external and the home-grown is recognised. In his paper "Zayd Ibn ‘All's Commentary on the Qur'an”, Kees Versteegh continues his earlier research on the sources of Arabic grammar (cf. Versteegh 1993), in which he highlights the contribution of the indigenous intellect to the development of this discipline by investigating a corpus of early commentaries on the Qur'an. In the commentary under consideration here this indigenous contribution is clear in two areas: (a) in the use of technical terminologies whose genesis lies in the early exegetical tradition, and (b) in the interest in lexical phenomena which, strictly speaking, go beyond the exegetical boundary of displaying the meaning of the text of the Holy Qur'an. The second paper by the editor of this volume deals with the theoretical foundations of Arabic grammar by considering the discipline from the view-point of the autonomy debate in modem linguistic theory (Givon 1979 and Newmeyer 1986, 1995). Combining a macro-perspective on the topic with a micro- analytical treatment of selected texts from the Arabic Grammatical Tradition, the paper seeks to exemplify the occurrence of the two tendencies of autonomy and non autonomy in this tradition by investigating two areas: (a) the relationship between grammar and its neighbouring disciplines, and (b) the pragmatic function of grammar in its social milieu. The author also makes the point that it is largely the concern with autonomy which ensures the epistemological and methodological integrity of Arabic grammar as a discipline in its own right. The third paper bridges the gap between the historical and the theoretical, which constitute the primary concerns of the preceding two papers respectively. In this paper Yishai Peled concentrates on the emergence and development of technical terminologies in Arabic grammar from their inceptual beginnings as semantic extensions of everyday expressions to their establishment as organisational currencies in a theoretical
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